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"Wolves" is a guitar-driven alternative rock song with industrial, grunge and electronic elements. [2] [3] [4] Singer Shirley Manson described it as the album's "pop song." [5] "Wolves" was inspired by the two wolves story which Manson read somewhere on Easter-European folklore about "the boy who had the wolves inside and this wrestling of good ...
The story of the Two Wolves is a memetic legend of unknown origin, commonly attributed to Cherokee or other indigenous American peoples in popular retelling. The legend is usually framed as a grandfather or elder passing wisdom to a young listener; the elder describes a battle between two wolves within one’s self, using the battle as a metaphor for inner conflict.
When asked about the theme behind the seventh track "Freedom – The Wolves Within", Jansen stated that the song is "based on an old story of a fight between two wolves. What we want to be and what we want to reflect on the world around us depends on which wolf we feed and also the degree of control we have over our inner wolves." [10]
Described as the album's "pop song" and referencing the Two Wolves legend, "Wolves" recalls the power of youth and the danger therein. [30] It was released as the album's third single. Centrepiece track "Waiting for God" is about police shootings of Black people and the disbelief towards organized religion in the face of injustice and lack of ...
Taylor Swift’s 11th studio album, “The Tortured Poets Department,” has been released overnight, and in typical Swift fashion, she dropped at a surprise additional 15 songs — confirming ...
I firmly think we’d all be better people if we could understand our emotions the way Pixar explains them in the Inside Out franchise. Sadness is a feeling to be recognized and appreciated, not ...
"Running with the Wolves" is the fourth single released by Aurora and the second single on Running with the Wolves and All My Demons Greeting Me as a Friend. It was written by Aurora, Michelle Leonard and Nicolas Rebscher and produced by Odd Martin Skålnes, Rebscher and Magnus Skylstad. On 20 April 2015, the song was officially released worldwide.
The song "Auld Lang Syne" comes from a Robert Burns poem. Burns was the national poet of Scotland and wrote the poem in 1788, but it wasn't published until 1799—three years after his death.